Hamlet: A Shakespearean Tragedy. Tragedy – According to Aristotle  Is an imitation of a single, unified action –Serious, complete and probable –Has magnitude.

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Presentation on theme: "Hamlet: A Shakespearean Tragedy. Tragedy – According to Aristotle  Is an imitation of a single, unified action –Serious, complete and probable –Has magnitude."— Presentation transcript:

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Hamlet: A Shakespearean Tragedy

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Tragedy – According to Aristotle  Is an imitation of a single, unified action –Serious, complete and probable –Has magnitude  Concerns the fall of a person whose character is good, believable and consistent  The fall is caused by some error or frailty in the protagonist ( not by vice or depravity )

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 Language is embellished with each kind of artistic ornament  Tragedy is presented in the form of action not narrative  It arouses emotions of pity and terror, resulting in a catharsis of these emotions

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Aristotle’s tragic characters should have the following qualities: 1. “good or fine.” - this quality relates to moral purpose; it is relative to class: “Even a woman may be good, and also a slave, though the woman may be said to be an inferior being, and the slave quite worthless.” 2. “fitness of character” (true to type); e.g. valor is appropriate for a warrior but not for a woman. 3. “true to life” (realistic)

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4. “consistency” (true to themselves) - a character's personality and motivations are established, these should continue throughout the play. 5. “necessary or probable.” Characters must be logically constructed according to “the law of probability or necessity” that governs the actions of the play. 6. “true to life and yet more beautiful” (idealized, ennobled).

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What do you have to have to be a tragic hero?  Belief in your own freedom  A supreme pride  A capacity for suffering  A sense of commitment  Vigorous protest  Transfiguration  Impact

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Belief in your own freedom:  The hero makes choices when faced with dilemmas and has the faith and courage to accept the outcomes of his choices

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A supreme pride The pride seems a reflection of arrogance and conceit. It seems to demonstrate a superiority to fellow human beings and an equality with gods. But it gives the tragic hero a unique power and dignity.

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A capacity for suffering: He suffers because he believes in what he is doing, and because he feels both guilt and guiltlessness at the same time. He justifies his actions, yet is not convinced they are just. He has the strength to endure the pains inflicted upon him. He has no fear of death. He questions the forces within and without him that drive him to the actions that destroy him.

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A sense of commitment Once the forces of the conflict are set in motion, he is committed. There is an inevitability that moves him to the resolution. He can stop the movement by a change in decision, but his dedication leads him to assert the freedom to let the process follow its chosen direction.

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Vigorous protest The tragic hero objects with vehemence, logic, and pain against the situation in which he finds himself. He does not accept his fate meekly. He cries out against the gods, against his own weaknesses, against the world, against the forces that placed him in jeopardy.

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Transfiguration The suffering of tragic man refines him. He learns from his agony, and his awareness lies in his deeper understanding of the human condition. He is ennobled and softened by his experiences. He begins to see more clearly his place in the universe and the greatness that is human potential. He rises from the ash heap a wise and more humane individual, and his death is not an obliteration because he leaves a memory of glory.

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Impact: Out of the tragedies of life faced heroically and questioningly, out of the desire to know the why of pain and suffering, out of the frequent nobility with which a few heroic beings face the punishments of life comes a deeper understanding of the human condition, not only on the part of the tragic hero but also on the part of the other characters in the play, as well as the audience who participate in his agony.

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Characteristics of a Shakespearean tragedy  Story may have many characters but is focused on one or two  Story leads up to and includes the death of the hero  Depicts the troubled part of the hero’s life that precedes and leads up to his death  Hero is a person of high degree  Suffering and calamity are exceptional. They are unexpected and contrast previous happiness or glory  Suffering and calamity extend to make entire scene one of woe  This scene becomes the chief source of tragic emotions, especially pity